Smooth and sustainable printing for Italy’s largest insurer

Schools and universities might be our mainstay, but we love making a difference in the financial sector – especially if it equates to doubling down on sustainability for a large enterprise business.

Our awesome European partner Glocal Value has put together a case study for the Reale Group, a subsidiary of the largest insurance provider in Italy, and an all-round environmental champion.

Read on for the cliff notes on how we delivered efficient earth-loving printing for Reale, and get the full piece after the jump.

Big heart, big numbers, big needs

Protecting nearly 4 million policyholders with the expertise of 3,100 employees, Reale Group doesn’t do small. The same goes for their Turin-Milan print network, boasting a collective 200 MFDs.

To bring it all together, they needed a print management solution that could cut costs, optimize all print activity, and – our favourite bit – do so in line with their no-compromise commitment to sustainability.

And we couldn’t be happier about Glocal Value putting us forward.

Real ROI for Reale

1. Less waste and more security with Secure Print Release

With the timely and professional help of Glocal, Reale were able to easily implement Secure Print Release and card readers.

Now forgotten jobs don’t get printed, and everything’s protected by user-authenticated release.

2. Clear and immediate reporting

Validating their newfound mindful printing, PaperCut let’s Reale see just how much money and paper they’re saving with easy, detailed reports.

3. Simple installation, configuration, and use

Reale Group found PaperCut MF a dream to install and configure. It also received the best scores for cost and user experience in their internal testing and solution comparisons.

Want the full scoop?

Michael Beratis - Senior Copywriter

Michael "Beetle" Beratis is PaperCut's Grand Master Copywriter by virtue of being their only copywriter, but whatever.
Initially drawn to the world of print management by an open drummer position in the PaperCut band, he’s felt jilted ever since they filled it mere days before his employment.